CBS's Rose Badgers Romney Adviser on Iran; Interrupts Six Times in 50 Seconds

One might have thought that Charlie Rose received an extra dose of caffeine before Friday's CBS This Morning,
as the normally-subdued anchor hounded Romney campaign adviser Dan
Senor on how the Republican presidential nominee would change policy
toward Iran. Rose wouldn't let Senor complete an answer, interrupting
six different times in 50 seconds. [audio available here; video below]

By contrast, 11 days earlier, the veteran TV host tossed softballs
at Democratic Senator Dick Durbin on the issue of ObamaCare, and merely
prompted Durbin on the issue of the Chicago teachers strike.

About two minutes into the five-minute segment, Rose asked his guest,
"What is the single biggest difference on foreign policy between
Governor Romney and President Obama?" Senor answered that "the biggest
crisis facing the United States, from a national security viewpoint, is
Iran developing a nuclear weapons capability. And tragically, the Obama
administration really wasted the first couple of years of its
administration on a failed strategy to isolate Iran, to ramp up economic
pressure on Iran."

Before the Romney aide could complete his thought, however, the CBS anchor interjected, "So,
if Governor Romney is elected president, what's the first thing he
would do about Iran and its effort to have a nuclear capacity?"
When Senor replied that "what he [Romney] would not have done is waste
as much time as the Obama administration," Rose interrupted again: "No, but the campaign is about what you would do, not what you wouldn't do, as you know, and it's about the future."

The foreign policy adviser tried yet again to finish his statement, but the TV personality cut in three more times:

SENOR: So he would not have wasted the time that the administration-

ROSE: What will he do, Dan?

SENOR: And he would ramp up – ramp up – he would ramp up economic pressure on Iran, even more-

ROSE: What economic pressure that is not ramped up would he use?

SENOR: There are tougher, much tougher sanctions that Congress has been advocating for-

ROSE: Like?

SENOR: That the administration has been – the administration has been resistant to some of these sanctions....

Rose would interrupt Senor one more time during the remaining two
minutes of the interview. When his guest raised the recent attacks on
American diplomatic facilities in the Islamic world, as well as the
ongoing conflict in Syria, the journalist strangely reemphasized the
fact that the election "this election is about the future" and asked,
"What would the nominee for the Republican Party, Mitt Romney, do in
Syria that's not being done today?"

During his September 10, 2012 interview of Durbin, the CBS anchor set
up the Senate majority whip to forward the Democratic caucus's talking
points against Romney: "So, what do you make of this: Romney saying that on these two provisions [of ObamaCare], he wants to keep them - two things that I would assume people – most people are in favor of?"

The transcript of the relevant portion of Dan Senor segment from Friday's CBS This Morning:

CHARLIE ROSE: Dan, your expertise is foreign policy. You're traveling
with the vice presidential nominee, Paul Ryan. What is the single
biggest difference on foreign policy between Governor Romney and
President Obama?

SENOR: I would say, Charlie, the biggest crisis facing the United
States, from a national security viewpoint, is Iran developing a nuclear
weapons capability. And tragically, the Obama administration really
wasted the first couple of years of its administration on a failed
strategy to isolate Iran, to ramp up economic pressure on Iran-

ROSE: So – so, if Governor Romney is elected president, what's the
first thing he would do about Iran and its effort to have a nuclear
capacity?

SENOR: Well, I would say, first of all, what he would not have done is waste as much time as the Obama administration – no-

ROSE: No, but the campaign is about what you would do, not what you wouldn't do, as you know, and it's about the future-

SENOR: Of course, no, no – yeah, absolutely. So he would not have wasted the time that the administration-

ROSE: What will he do, Dan?

SENOR: And he would ramp up – ramp up – he would ramp up economic pressure on Iran, even more-

ROSE: What economic pressure that is not ramped up would he use?

SENOR: There are tougher, much tougher sanctions that Congress has been advocating for-

ROSE: Like?

SENOR: That the administration has been – the administration has been
resistant to some of these sanctions - to not giving waivers to certain
financial institutions around the world. So, Congress has passed tough
sanctions against Iran. There are waivers in those sanctions. The
administration has used-

ROSE: Should-

SENOR: These waivers too much, to let people get out of these
sanctions. Let me finish. He would also – this is very important here.
We do not advocate military action against Iran. It should be the option
of last resort. However, what the administration has done is broadcast
to Tehran - to the mullahs in Tehran - that the military option is the
absolute one thing America doesn't want anybody to do. And so, the
threat of military action is not credible. So, we need to ramp up
economic pressure, increase diplomatic isolation, and make the threat of
military action credible.

But Charlie, it's not just Iran. It's not just Iran. We're watching,
right now, the whole region unravel. You look at 20,000 innocent
civilians dead in Syria. You look at Iran getting closer to a nuclear
bomb. You see – you know, Salafists and extremists storming our
embassies. There is a sense, Charlie-

ROSE: This election is about the future. What would the nominee for the
Republican Party, Mitt Romney, do in Syria that's not being done today?

SENOR: Sure. Yeah, and I think that's an important question, because
you got to take all these – all these countries one by one. On Syria,
it's been over a year since the President has said Bashar Assad must go.
Bashar Assad is still in power. America looks impotent in the region.
So, a President Romney would look to do more to help the opposition
movement on the ground in Syria - working with our allies, like the
Turks, like the Saudis, like the Qatarese, to get the opposition more
training, more resources, more weapons - really coordinate the effort,
and would not have dragged its feet as long as we have, to give the
opposition assistance. They've been calling out for American leadership
for a long time. They haven't – and this is in America's national
security interest. Bashar Assad is Tehran's closest ally. An Assad
falling would be a strategic blow to Iran.

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